Peace-walls, Flags, and Dark Passages

IF 0.1 0 ARCHITECTURE
M. McLintock
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The cites of Belfast and Londonderry in Northern Ireland are fractured with a network of walls, fences, and barricades, that divide traditionally Loyalist- Unionist-Protestants from Republican- Nationalist-Catholics communities. They were mostly constructed between the late 1960s and early 1990s, during a period of conflict known as ‘The Troubles.’ Since 1995, the walls have been rebranded with the official euphemism ‘peace walls,’ and the groups they divide renamed as ‘interface communities.’ They are due to be removed by 2023, as part of commitments drawn out in the Good Friday Agreement; the 1998 accord that largely brought an end to the conflict. However, due to Northern Ireland’s devolved government, and a lack of funding towards the advocacy groups needed to bring these opposing communities together, among other opaque issues, this goal is increasingly unattainable. Woven throughout this network of fortification infrastructures is a nascent tourist typology and muralscape that is complex and murky, bound up in underexplored emergent identity politics. This article leans on spatial post-conflict theory, and first- hand accounts of encounters with this architectural typology, to explore the nebulous context in Northern Ireland.
和平墙、旗帜和黑暗通道
北爱尔兰的贝尔法斯特和伦敦德里市被一个由墙、栅栏和路障组成的网络所分割,将传统的忠诚派-统一派新教徒与共和党-民族主义天主教徒社区分隔开来。它们大多建造于20世纪60年代末至90年代初,当时正处于一段被称为“麻烦”的冲突时期自1995年以来,这些墙被重新命名为官方委婉语“和平墙”,它们所划分的群体被重新名称为“界面社区”作为《耶稣受难日协议》中承诺的一部分,它们将在2023年前被取消;1998年的协议基本上结束了冲突。然而,由于北爱尔兰的权力下放,以及缺乏将这些对立社区团结在一起所需的倡导团体的资金,以及其他不透明的问题,这一目标越来越难以实现。在这个防御基础设施网络中,交织着一种新兴的旅游类型和壁画,它复杂而模糊,与未被充分探索的新兴身份政治联系在一起。本文以冲突后的空间理论为基础,对这种建筑类型的遭遇进行了第一手描述,以探索北爱尔兰的模糊背景。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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